from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

Etymologies

From the Late Latin interpretābilis, from interpretor; equivalent to interpret +‎ -able; compare the obsolete French interpretable. (Wiktionary)

Examples

However, since they do not, in fact, use any term interpretable as expressing an explicit concept of experience, we should stick closely to their terminology and characterize “personal knowledge” (qin zhi, B70) as knowledge by observation (guan).

Interval Measurement, which allows interpretation of ratios of differences, so that, for example, one difference can be said to be twice another, also arithmetic means are interpretable, as well as medians and modes.